As you was so good as to desire Mr. Schweighauser, to consult with me, and Mr. Schweighauser
wrote to Mr. Berube du Costentin, to take my Advice, I have ventured to give him and
Captain Landais, my opinion in Writing that it will be most for the public service,
for Mr. Costentin to apply to the Intendant of the Marine for Such Materials and Workmen
as are absolutely necessary to repair the ship, and after this shall be done and the
Prisoners, put on shore, that he proceed for Nantes.

I have had the Honour twice to wait on the Intendant and this afternoon, he very politely
promised to take the Prisoners on shore, and furnish the Necessaries forth with. I
must confess, that I am not very well pleased with putting all the Prisoners on shore.
But the Captain is sanguine that the ship would not be safe with any of the Ring Leaders
on Board.2

With a very little alteration of our naval Code, three or four of these might have
been punished, and the rest would have made the better Men. For I am inclined to think,
that altho the Conspiracy was bad enough, it has been made more of than was necessary.

The Midshipmen and some other Petty officers, have been with me, to solicit the same
favour which you have granted to the Commission and Warrant officers, a suit of Cloaths
proportioned to their stations. And as these perhaps have more need of it than the
others, and as I thought it not probable that it was your Intention to exclude them,
I have promised them to interceed with your Excellency in their Behalf.

[I] congratulate you on the Capture of Senegal,3 which is all the News I have heard. I return to Nantes, tomorrow or next day—there
to wait the Motions of the Frigate.

[salute] I have the Honour to be, Sir, your most obedient and most humble servant

1. This letter was dated 13 March (Adams Papers). Franklin expressed his hope that JA had arrived safely at Nantes and enclosed a letter that had arrived the previous
day, perhaps that of 9 March from Pierre Landais (above).

2. The prisoners were 38 former crew members of the Alliance, who, on the voyage from America within a few days of France, had been discovered
plotting a mutiny, during which Landais was to have been put in irons and set adrift
in an open boat (Charles O. Paullin, “Admiral Pierre Landais,” Catholic Hist. Rev., 17:299–300 [Oct. 1931]).

3. The French captured Senegal from a disease-ridden British garrison in February. Their
possession of it was confirmed in the Anglo-French peace treaty of 1783 (Cambridge Modern Hist., 6:452, 464; London Chronicle, 20–23 Feb.).